Games

Recap
 
Briere, Richards help Flyers take series lead
PHILADELPHIA 6, WASHINGTON 3
 

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) -- Daniel Briere is showing why the
Philadelphia Flyers paid big money for his services. Mike
Richards is showing why he will have a C on his jersey before
long.

Briere scored two goals and set up another and Richards
converted a penalty shot late in the third period as the Flyers
seized control of their Eastern Conference quarterfinal series
against the Washington Capitals with a 6-3 victory Tuesday.

Scott Hartnell, Sami Kapanen and Mike Knuble also scored and
Vaclav Prospal recorded three assists for Philadelphia, which
took a two-games-to-one lead in the series.

"I loved the effort of our team," Flyers coach John Stevens
said. "It just seemed that we were running in waves. One line
was picking up after the other. We had short shifts and great
tempo."

"We're just keeping it simple," Richards said. "We're trying to
get the pucks deep and get on the forecheck. We aren't doing
anything spectacular or anything special. We're just chipping
pucks in deep and gaining the red line."

Martin Biron made 16 saves for the Flyers, who host Game Four on
Thursday.

"It's far from over," Briere said. "It's one game at a time.
There is nothing done yet. I'd rather be up 2-1 than being
down, but at the same time, there is lots of work to be done.
We've played eight out of nine good, solid periods, so that is a
good sign."

Eric Fehr, defenseman Mike Green and Brooks Laich tallied for
the Capitals, who went 1-for-7 on the power play.

"It's 2-1 in a seven-game series," Washington coach Bruce
Boudreau said. "It could be 3-0, but it's not. We haven't
played our best hockey. Maybe we're learning as a young team
what it's going to take to beat that team. Hopefully, we're
learning very quickly."

"We know that Game Four is going to be a swing game," Laich
added. "If they win it, we're in a deep hole, and the guys are
going to realize that. We don't want to get too far down before
we have to make a desperate comeback."

For the second straight game, Art Ross and Maurice Richard
Trophy winner Alex Ovechkin was held without a point for
Washington. Apart from the third period of Game One, the
Russian superstar has been kept under control by the Flyers thus
far in the series.

"You can see them getting frustrated, and Alex in particular,"
Boudreau said. "It's not like there are words I can say that
are going to make it better. He is the best player in the
world, and Philadelphia is doing a good job on him right now."

Signed to an eight-year, $52 million contract last summer,
Briere failed to match his career-high scoring totals of a
season ago while with the Buffalo Sabres, recording just 72
points with the Flyers after registering 95 in 2006-07. But the
30-year-old is proving his worth thus far in the playoffs.

After notching two goals and an assist in a losing effort in
Game One, Briere posted identical numbers Tuesday, opening the
scoring with just under four minutes to go in the first period
and giving Philadelphia a 4-2 lead with his second goal of the
night in the waning seconds of the middle session.

"It's all about winning," Briere said. "It's been a lot of fun,
but at the same time, it's all about winning. The first
(game), our line played a good game, but you couldn't enjoy it
because we were down 1-0 in the series. I'll enjoy this night a
lot more. I'm happy that I'm scoring goals, but I would trade
all the goals for a win in the playoffs."

"He is just a little guy, but he is very strong on the puck,"
Prospal said. "He is a very smart hockey player. He finds
holes and he makes things happen. It is great to play with a
player like that."

An All-Star this season, his third in the league, Richards set
up Briere's second goal before netting one of his own with 2:59
remaining in the third to restore the Flyers' two-goal lead.

Tripped from behind by Washington defenseman Shaone Morrisonn
while on a breakaway, Richards was awarded a penalty shot. The
23-year-old future captain of the Flyers made good on the
chance, sliding the puck between the pads of goaltender
Cristobal Huet for his first career postseason goal.

"I was a little nervous, but I'm happy it went in," Richards
said. "I just stuck with what worked in the past. When you're
that nervous about going down on a breakaway, you want to go
with what works and what got you there."

"I love his composure," Stevens said. "With the game on the
line with all that pressure, he went in there like a confident
guy and had a pretty good idea about what he wanted to do. That
was a huge goal for our team. I just thought that he was a
force all night."

Knuble sealed the victory with an empty-netter for Philadelphia,
which squandered a similar 4-2 lead after two periods in Game
One.

Briere gave the Flyers a 1-0 edge when he carried the puck
through the right faceoff circle and beat Huet high on the short
side at 16:10 of the first.

"I made a move because I was thinking of cutting inside for a
second," Briere said. "Then I saw (Huet) go down and I thought
that I had a little bit of room over his shoulder, and it just
squeaked through."

"He's a good player and they pay him to do those things," Laich
said. "He's a tricky little player. You can't take your eye
off him for one second because he'll find a little hole and
he'll tap one in. ... We've got to find a way to shut him down
because he's putting pucks in the net."

But former Philadelphia enforcer Donald Brashear made a pass
from behind the net to Fehr, who fired the puck past Biron to
the stick side from the slot with 2:39 remaining to forge a tie.

Hartnell gave the Flyers the lead for good just 65 seconds
later, one-timing Prospal's cross-ice pass by Huet from the
right circle. Kapanen made it 3-1 only 17 seconds afterward, as
Washington defenseman Milan Jurcina's pass from behind the net
landed right on the stick of Jim Dowd, who fed the diminutive
Finn in the slot.

"We just got scored on, and there was no time to think about it
and they scored again," Huet said. "I know that it stinks, but
I thought that we reacted pretty well in the second."

"I was hoping that we could come out of the period with the
lead," Boudreau said. "We knew that the Flyers were going to
come hard and they were going to be physical. I felt that if we
could sustain the pressure, we could have gotten out of that
period. I felt that 3-1 really hurt us and put us in a tough
position."

Green cashed in during a power play at 7:28 of the second,
waiting for Hartnell to slide by before unleashing a slap shot
from the right point that beat Biron to the stick side for his
third goal of the series.

But after Richards faked a slap shot from the blue line, he
dished to Briere, who scored from below the left circle with 9.8
seconds remaining for a 4-2 advantage.

"Danny had a little twinkle in his eye tonight," Stevens said.
"He looked like he was a player that was going to play the way
we did tonight. He was a confident guy. He has really played
well through these playoffs."

Laich again cut the deficit to one with 4:34 left in the third,
when Morrisonn's shot from the left circle deflected off his
stick and past Biron. Following a video review, the goal stood.

"It looked like it was going over the net and I got my hand up
to catch the puck," Biron said. "I thought it was touched by a
high stick. It was a real tough call and it could have gone
either way."


 
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